Fact-checking Trump and Miller’s claims of a ‘migrant invasion’ in California
Federal
and state data tell a far different story about migration to California
than the political fury unfolding in Washington and on the streets of
Los Angeles.
People gather at Mariachi Plaza in Los Angeles's Boyle Heights neighborhood on Monday. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post)
President
Donald Trump deployed the National Guard to California, saying the
troops need to “liberate” Los Angeles from a “migrant invasion.” White
House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, a key architect of the
president’s immigration crackdown, said on social media that the city is
proof of how migration “unravels” a society.
But
federal and state data tell a far different story about the Golden
State than the political fury unfolding in Washington and on the streets
of Los Angeles, where the administration has sent 700 Marines and 4,000 National Guard troops as protests continue over recent immigration raids.
In California, violent crime is down,
and the unemployment rate is close to the national average. The state
recently overtook Japan as the world’s fourth-largest economy. It has
the highest number of immigrants — both legal, most of them citizens,
and undocumented. But in recent years, the state has lost hundreds of
thousands of undocumented immigrants to their homelands or to
more-affordable states. Unauthorized immigrants in California remain
well below the peak of nearly 3 million more than a decade ago for
reasons that often have little to do with enforcement — or Trump.
“Even
the surge that we’ve seen more recently in undocumented immigration, a
lot of that has not come to California,” said Eric McGhee, policy
director and senior fellow at the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of
California. “If I were to hazard a guess, it’s because California’s
expensive.”
Trump
officials have cast undocumented immigrants as criminals, blamed them
for the state’s troubles and said residents are overreacting to basic
deportation operations that aim to reduce illegal immigration. Officials
have shared images of protesters flying Mexican flags and burning cars
to build support for Trump’s signature tax legislation, which would add
billions in funding for his quest to carry out the largest
mass-deportation operation in U.S. history.
Newsom says democracy is under assault
0:56
California
Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on June 10 denounced President Donald Trump for
inflaming the situation in Los Angeles by sending federal forces.
(Video: The Washington Post)
California,
a state that has passed laws to shield undocumented immigrants from
deportation if they have not committed serious crimes, could be a prime
target if that bill passes. The state is home to nearly a quarter of the
estimated 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the United States.
White
House officials did not respond directly to questions about why they
think the state is unraveling or being invaded, given the economic and
demographic shifts and the decline in the number of undocumented
immigrants over time.
“Illegal
aliens and violent criminal protestors have spent the last several days
attacking law enforcement, waving foreign flags, lighting cars on fire,
and unleashing a state of outright anarchy,” White House deputy press
secretary Abigail Jackson said in a statement. “Anyone downplaying this
behavior, or asking why it’s bad, is either an idiot or a propagandist
for the Democrat party.”
The
Biden administration refrained from deporting most undocumented
immigrants unless they had recently crossed the border or committed
serious crimes. In states such as California, that policy made it even
easier for people without a legal status to fit in. Lawmakers there have
passed laws stating that law enforcement will not aid in detentions and
deportations unless someone has committed a serious offense. California
legislators also have granted undocumented immigrants privileges they
cannot get in many states, including driver’s licenses, health care,
in-state college tuition and some financial aid.
Still,
the number of undocumented immigrants in California fell. The census
doesn’t count unauthorized immigrants, a population that tends to fly
under the radar to avoid being deported, and estimates vary widely. The
Department of Homeland Security estimates that the number of undocumented immigrants in California declined from 2.9 million in 2010 to 2.6 million in 2022, the most recent year available.
Jeffrey
Passel, a senior demographer at the Pew Research Center, said that it
is likely that the number of undocumented or temporary immigrants in
California increased under President Joe Biden but that it remains well
below its peak. Passel said the stereotype of immigrants as single men
or gang members doesn’t match the data.
“That’s not who these people are. They’re young, working families,” he said.
One
reason California’s unauthorized population declined is that the number
of undocumented immigrants from Mexico in the state fell from 2 million
in 2010 to 1.2 million in 2023, said Robert Warren, a senior visiting
fellow at the Center for Migration Studies of New York.
“That’s a huge drop,” he said.
Mexican
citizens returned home as its economy and government institutions
improved, analysts said, and because they were getting older, as many
arrived starting in the 1990s.
“You’re
not getting a large inflow of new undocumented immigrants, but there’s
still a substantial number in the state who are growing older over
time,” McGhee said. “Many of them have children who are citizens and are
just very established in California.”
Housing costs have driven immigrants and Americans alike to other states. A mid-tier California home costs nearly $800,000, roughly double the national average, according to an April report by the California Legislative Analyst’s Office.
And
in recent years hope for the opportunity to apply for legal residency
had faded. The last time Congress allowed millions of unauthorized
immigrants to apply for residency was in 1986, when President Ronald
Reagan, a former governor of California, signed the Immigration Reform
and Control Act. Reagan said the objective was to “humanely regain
control of our borders,” establish an orderly immigration system and
“not to discriminate in any way against particular nations or people.”
Illegal
immigration soared in the law’s aftermath, however. Trump has seized on
the issue to rally his supporters, saying Biden officials allowed in
millions from Venezuela and other countries who did not follow the usual
process to immigrate legally. Biden officials had said people were
fleeing authoritarian regimes and joblessness after the coronavirus
pandemic, and economists argued that the influx boosted the robust U.S.
recovery from it.
The
immigration arrests in California have rattled one of the nation’s
oldest and most established undocumented immigrant communities. While
city and state leaders say they do not condone any violence, they note
that most demonstrations have been peaceful. In contrast, they say,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and the Trump
administration are targeting longtime residents, parents and children,
and making them afraid to go to church, school or work. They say the
president should try to find a legislative solution for them instead.
“There
is fear. There is anxiety. There is real-life trauma happening as we
speak, all being observed and absorbed by children of all ages,” said
Alberto Carvalho, superintendent of Los Angeles Unified School District,
which has seen enrollment shrink by 130,000 students in the past
decade. “Yes, we do need law and order, but at the same time, we need
viable, humane solutions for children and families who are here, are
working, are paying taxes, are law-abiding, and many of whom are parents
to U.S.-born citizen children.”
Families
of detained workers hold a news conference in front of a Ambiance
Apparel warehouse in Los Angeles on June 9. (Karla Gachet/FTWP)
Carvalho
said he came to America from Portugal in the 1980s on a visa he
overstayed, working illegally as a busboy and waiter until he bumped
into Rep. E. Clay Shaw, a Florida Republican who he said helped him get a
student visa and work permit that changed his life.
“Certainly
when I came to this country I didn’t feel I was invading the shores of
America,” Carvalho said. “I am certain, however, that when Irish and
Italian families were landing on Ellis Island, there were some in the
city that felt to a certain extent that it was invasion. Well, guess
what? This is the history of America.”
Sen.
Alex Padilla (D) said the Trump administration’s rhetoric recalled the
state’s internal struggles over its shifting demographics, which it
confronted decades ago as immigration transformed California from a
majority-White state into one where Latinos are now the largest group.
In
1994, nearly 59 percent of California voters passed Proposition 187, a
ballot initiative designed to deny public benefits to undocumented
immigrants and bar their children from public schools. At the time, Gov.
Pete Wilson (R) and others were blaming California’s economic troubles
on immigrants.
“It
was offensive. It was insulting,” said Padilla, the first Latino U.S.
senator from the state. “As a result, California’s a very different
place today.”
Courts
later blocked the measure. But its passage galvanized immigrants to
become naturalized citizens and register to vote. It also motivated
young people such as Padilla, a U.S.-born citizen and the son of undocumented immigrants,
to get involved in civic life. He graduated from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology but traded a career in engineering for public
service.
Padilla
said the state’s improvements in health care, climate change and the
economy are “not despite our immigrant population but because of our
immigrant population, that contributes so much as workforce, as
consumers, as entrepreneurs.”
“That should be something that other states and the nation should emulate, not attack,” he said.
But Corrin Rankin, chair of the California Republican Party, spoke in favor of immigration enforcement in a video posted Monday on X, saying Democratic administrations were wrong to spare many unauthorized immigrants from deportation.
“The
American people voted to remove criminal illegal immigrants from our
country,” she said in the video. “The president must be allowed to
enforce the law. It is tragic that Democrats gave illegal immigrants
false hope that they could stay regardless of their crimes.”
Over
time, California’s attitudes appear to have changed. Since the late
1990s, the Public Policy Institute of California has polled residents on
whether they think immigrants benefit or burden the state.
In
1998, fewer than half of the survey respondents said immigrants were
good for the state. This year, 72 percent said immigrants benefit
California.
“The
reality is up until this last year, California was growing faster than
the U.S.,” Jerry Nickelsburg, an economics professor at the UCLA
Anderson School of Management, said in reference to the economy. “If
that’s unraveling, I don’t know.”